presentation as a solitary pulmonary nodule with eccentric cavitations A 41-year-old woman who suffered from monthly haemoptysis for.16 years was referred to a chest surgeon due to an abnormal chest radiograph. The haemoptysis usually occurred on the first day of her menses and lasted,3 days. She had poliomyelitis during her childhood and underwent two caesar-ean sections about two decades previously. There was no prior history of dysmenorrhoeal or abnormal vaginal bleeding. Physical examinations and laboratory investigations were unremarkable. The chest radiograph (fig 1A) showed a right lower lobe nodule. CT scan (fig 1B,C) performed during her menstrual period demonstrated a well-demarcated subpleural ovoid tumour with eccentric cavitati...